1. Patient‐derived organoids as a preclinical platform for precision medicine in colorectal cancer
- Author
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Dong-Wook Min, Yohan An, Tae-You Kim, Jeonghwan Youk, Hwang-Phill Kim, Sheehyun Kim, Jaeyoung Chun, Jong Pil Im, Sang-Hyun Song, Young Seok Ju, Kyu Joo Park, Young-Won Cho, and Sae-Won Han
- Subjects
Oncology ,Drug ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Colorectal cancer ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Organoid ,Humans ,Therapy efficacy ,Precision Medicine ,Personalized therapy ,media_common ,business.industry ,Disease progression ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Precision medicine ,Organoids ,Drug repositioning ,Disease Progression ,Molecular Medicine ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business - Abstract
Patient-derived organoids are being considered as models that can help guide personalized therapy through in vitro anti-cancer drug response evaluation. However, attempts to quantify in vitro drug responses in organoids and compare them with responses in matched patients remain inadequate. In this study, we investigated whether drug responses of organoids correlate with clinical responses of matched patients and disease progression of patients. Organoids were established from 54 patients with colorectal cancer who (except for one patient) did not receive any form of therapy before, and tumor organoids were assessed through whole-exome sequencing. For comparisons of in vitro drug responses in matched patients, we developed an "organoid score" based on the variable anti-cancer treatment responses observed in organoids. Very interestingly, a higher organoid score was significantly correlated with a lower tumor regression rate after the standard-of-care treatment in matched patients. Additionally, we confirmed that patients with a higher organoid score (≥ 2.5) had poorer progression-free survival compared with those with a lower organoid score (< 2.5). Furthermore, to assess potential drug repurposing using an FDA-approved drug library, ten tumor organoids derived from patients with disease progression were applied to a simulation platform. Taken together, organoids and organoid scores can facilitate the prediction of anti-cancer therapy efficacy, and they can be used as a simulation model to determine the next therapeutic options through drug screening. Organoids will be an attractive platform to enable the implementation of personalized therapy for colorectal cancer patients.
- Published
- 2022